hairy
/ˈheəri/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈheri/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈher-ē/ (ame, mw)
hairy — adjective
- hairypositive
- hairiercomparative
- hairiestsuperlative
1. describes a person or animal that has thick hair growing on the body, especially
describes a person or animal that has thick hair growing on the body, especially where people typically have little or no hair
Stefan rolled up his sleeves to reveal a pair of very hairy arms.
collocation: hairy arms / hairy legs / hairy chest
The stray cat was so hairy that its eyes were nearly hidden beneath its fur.
Emre started shaving his back after too many stares at the pool.
The dog's hairy paws left muddy prints across the kitchen floor.
文法句型
hairy + noun (hairy legs, hairy chest)
be/look/get + hairy
用法筆記
Unlike hirsute (a formal, clinical word for the same idea), hairy is everyday English and can sound slightly negative or teasing depending on tone. Frequently used with body parts that are normally visible: arms, legs, chest, back.
常見錯誤
2. used in informal conversation to describe a risky or scary experience that also
used in informal conversation to describe a risky or scary experience that also feels exciting or thrilling, like a narrow escape
The plane landing grew hairy when the wind shifted at the last second.
pattern: a bit / a little / pretty / grow + hairy (intensifiers with gradable adjective)
Kabir described the hairy moment his car skidded on the icy bridge.
collocation: hairy moment / hairy situation
Things got hairy when we lost the trail just before sunset.
Ignacio's first solo drive through the mountain pass was pretty hairy.
- scary
more general; can describe any fear, not just exciting risk
- nerve-racking
focuses on the anxiety rather than the excitement
- white-knuckle
used almost exclusively for rides, flights, or drives that are thrillingly dangerous
- dicey
British informal; similar meaning but emphasises uncertainty rather than thrill
文法句型
hairy + noun (hairy moment, hairy situation)
get + hairy
用法筆記
Only used for situations that are scary-but-exciting, like driving fast, risky sports, or near-accidents. NOT used for slow dangers (illness, financial trouble) or abstract threats — saying 'the meeting got hairy' suggests a confrontation that was tense and unpredictable, not merely difficult.